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תקנות פון בלאג: יעדער קען שרייבען תגובות, אבער נישט קיין ניבול פה, באליידיגען אדער סטראשענען, ווער עס וועט נישט איינהאלטען די תקנות וועט מען חוסם זיין..Rules of the Blog: Everybody is welcome to write comments, however no vulgar language, insults or threats will be tolerated, you will be banned immediatelyDo NOT keep changing your Nick when writing comments, I can recognize you and will ban youIf you are aware of any molestation in the Jewish community, please report it to the proper authorities, and then please send us an emil with as many details as possible, so we can follow up and warn the TziburThis Blog is here for a purpose - to fight pedophilia and znus, not for snide remarks, filthy comments or threats

9/19/2017

Like many private investigators, Vincent Parco has, for nearly
30 years, made his living in the darker corners of New York.

In 1991, he admitted on the witness stand to having sold a pistol and a silencer to a
woman who used them in a love-triangle murder that came to be known in the
city’s tabloid media as the “Fatal Attraction” case. Decades later, he found
himself embroiled in the salacious prosecution of Anna Gristina, the so-called
Soccer Mom Madam, whose little black book inspired terror among the rich and
famous, both before, and after, she pleaded guilty to running a brothel
on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

On Tuesday, however, Mr. Parco, 67, made the leap from a simple
sleuth and connoisseur of crime to a criminal defendant. In a proceeding that
rivaled (and perhaps outdid) his prior exploits in the underworld, he was
charged with attempting to derail a sexual abuse case in a Hasidic community in
Brooklyn by secretly recording a witness having sex with prostitutes he had
hired then threatening to expose the man unless he stopped cooperating with
prosecutors.

The story began in March 2016 when Samuel Israel, who lives in
the Borough Park section of Brooklyn, was indicted on charges of sexually
abusing a 12-year-old girl. According to the Brooklyn district attorney’s
office, Mr. Israel, 45, was offered a deal under which he could have pleaded guilty
and served five years in prison.